anything that catches my eye

upsidesdown:

you know i had to do it to ‘em

clarissa-frey:

Best of Buzzfeed Unsolved Supernatural s2

daryshkart:

the ghouls know, that the boys are here!
in other words i really really love @buzzfeedunsolved :D

texas-conservative:
“#GoStros just won the World Series!!!!!!!!!
”

texas-conservative:

image

Originally posted by weirduniverse

#GoStros just won the World Series!!!!!!!!!

lifeismufkinweird:

Get your life together on the low. No one has to know what you’re doing and how.

peterchipp:
“”

peterchipp:

image

Originally posted by evan-redfield

lightlybow:

marrymejasonsegel:

I wrote a college paper once about gender dynamics in Disney films, and part dealt with the emphasis of androgyny in this film. Mulan is an outsider and unsure of her position of the world when she is adhering to both a total feminine role (the matchmaking scene) and a total masculine role (disguised as a male soldier) and it’s only when she’s able to embrace both sides that she is able to fully showcase her abilities and ultimately save the day. 

The entire climax, from climbing the poles using sashes, counting on Shan Yu’s complete dismissal of women to get the Emperor to safety, to this scene where she literally uses a symbol of womanhood (within the movie at least) to disarm the villain of his symbol of masculinity and beat him at his own game, shows Mulan relying on the aspects of her femininity that she has grown up adhering to and adapting the tactical knowledge and fighting skills that she learned disguised as a male soldier to those aspects. The result is a unique and innovative view of the world and her course of action that leads her to save the day when the male soldiers failed and the women wouldn’t even have been allowed to try. 

Can…

Can I read your paper and maybe build a shrine to it

aaliyah-appollonia:

odinsblog:

Aww

Neither parent aged